The Republican nominee is still among those facing prosecution – although the case has been paused, pending an investigation into the Fulton County District Attorney.
Courts in Georgia are still dealing with the elections.
Legal challenges to the voting system feature among more than 90 cases across America.
They have been brought, primarily, by Republicans who claim a flawed system needs restructuring.
Democrats dismiss it as political theatre, orchestrated by Trump, designed to sow mistrust and chaos.
Image: Donald Trump speaking at a campaign rally this week.
Pic: AP
They point to his repeated claims of “cheaters” as evidence he is laying the ground to challenge any Kamala Harris victory.
Both are gearing up for lengthy court challenges following the election.
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1:04
Harris plan if Trump declares victory early
Brad Raffensperger, the Republican secretary of state of Georgia, has announced two million people have already engaged in early voting in the state.
Asked by Sky News if Trump’s repeated claims of cheating in the 2024 election process had been helpful, he replied voters should refer any concerns to him.
“It doesn’t phase me,” he said. “I just continue to put my head down and do my job. I think if people want to find out what’s really going on, just ask Brad.”
In recent days a Georgia judge has rejected as “illegal, unconstitutional, and invalid” an attempt by Republicans to enforce new practices in the election process.
They included the hand-counting of votes and the right to examine any election-related documentation “prior to the certification of results”.
Opponents said the documents could have involved anything from training manuals to poll watcher credentials – they dismissed the legal action as a spurious effort to undermine faith in the legitimacy of election results.
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Janelle King, a Republican member of the Georgia State Election Board, has supported legal challenges.
She, along with fellow Republicans on the board, which oversees the state’s elections, were dubbed by Trump as “pit bulls fighting for honesty, transparency, and victory”.
Asked whether her actions encouraged disruption and delay, she told Sky News: “I would say that that’s all hypothetical, just like his statement is.
“There’s nothing that would indicate that that will happen.
“I think what causes people to distrust the election is when you present a proposal of rules that you feel will strengthen the election process, and then a judge who has no clue about our election process tells us it’s unconstitutional.
“That’s what causes distrust in the election process.”
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25:22
Trump’s legacy and how he changed America
The election process
Following the US election on 5 November, the counting of votes will designate so-called “electors”, charged with affirming the voters’ choice in the respective states.
On 17 December, the electors meet in their respective state houses and register the vote for their chosen candidate.
On or before 3 January 2025, when the new Congress assembles, the electors’ certificates are sent to Capitol Hill.
On 6 January 2025, Congress meets in session to certify the election and declare who has won the election.
On 20 January 2025 – Inauguration Day – the president-elect and vice president-elect take the Oath of Office and become president and vice president of the United States.
The dates are “pinch-points” in the process, liable to legal challenge.
A febrile political environment would raise the spectre of acrimony, protest, and violence of the recent past.
At the very least, it would create uncertainty.
Ezra Rosenberg, director of the non-partisan Voting Rights Project which exists to defend the right to vote, told Sky News: “It could be that some of these suits are being brought knowing that they’re going to lose, and maybe they’re setting up a post-election challenge of some sort. I have no idea.
“What bothers me more is that we put an iota of uncertainty in the mind of eligible voters as to whether or not they’re about to vote and that just should not be permitted to happen.”
A Mexican navy ship has hit the Brooklyn Bridge during a promotional tour in New York City.
The New York Fire Department said authorities were responding to injuries but had no details about how many people might have been hurt or whether they were on the vessel or on the bridge.
Sky’s US partner network NBC News reports that at least three people were seriously injured in the incident.
The Mexican navy said in a post on X that the Cuauhtemoc, an academy training vessel, was damaged in the accident, which has prevented it from continuing its voyage.
Eyewitness video of the collision posted online showed the mast of the ship, which was flying a large Mexican flag, scraping the underneath of the bridge.
Image: Pic: AP
The vessel then drifted toward the edge of the river as onlookers scrambled away from shore.
The Mexican navy said the status of personnel and material was under review by naval and local authorities, which were providing assistance.
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The Cuauhtemoc is about 297ft long and 40ft wide, according to the Mexican navy. It sailed for the first time in 1982.
Image: Pic: AP
Each year, it sets out at the end of classes at the naval military school to finish cadets’ training.
It left the Mexican port of Acapulco, on the Pacific coast, on 6 April with 277 people onboard, the navy said at the time.
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.
One person has died in a bomb explosion near a reproductive health clinic in California, authorities have said.
The incident took place in Palm Springs, a city two hours east of Los Angeles, and is being investigated as a possible car explosion.
The city’s mayor Ron DeHarte said one person died in the blast, adding that the bomb was “either in or near” a vehicle. The deceased’s identity is not known, Palm Springs police said.
Dr Maher Abdallah, who runs the American Reproductive Centers clinic, told the Associated Press his facility was damaged but all staff were safe and accounted for.
The explosion damaged the office space where the practice conducts patient consultations, but the IVF lab and stored embryos were unharmed, he added.
“I really have no clue what happened,” he said. “Thank God today happened to be a day that we have no patients.”
Image: Debris covers the ground after the explosion. Pic: ABC7 Los Angeles/AP
In a statement posted on Facebook the clinic said it was “heartbroken” to learn someone died in the explosion and added: “Our deepest condolences go out to the individuals and families affected.”
It continued: “Our mission has always been to help build families, and in times like these, we are reminded of just how fragile and precious life is.
“In the face of this tragedy, we remain committed to creating hope – because we believe that healing begins with community, compassion, and care.
The clinic will be fully operational on Monday, it added.
“This moment has shaken us – but it has not stopped us. We will continue to serve with strength, love, and the hope that brings new life into the world,” the statement concluded.
Image: Pic: ABC7 Los Angeles/AP
The Palm Springs city government said in a post on Facebook that the explosion happened on North Indian Canyon Drive, near East Tachevah Drive, before 11am local time (6pm GMT).
A burned-out car can be seen in a parking lot behind the building in aerial footage.
The blast caved in the clinic’s roof and blew debris across four lanes of the road.
Another person said he was inside a cannabis dispensary nearby when he felt a massive explosion.
Nima Tabrizi said: “The building just shook, and we go outside and there’s massive cloud smoke.”
Investigators from the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are travelling to the scene to help assess what happened.
California governor Gavin Newsom has been briefed on the explosion, his press office said.
A former FBI director has been interviewed by the US Secret Service over a social media post that Republicans say was a call for violence against President Donald Trump.
James Comey, who led the FBI from 2013 until he was fired in 2017 by Mr Trump during his first term in office, shared a photo of seashells appearing to form the numbers “86 47”.
Image: James Comey later removed the Instagram post. File pic: AP
He captioned the Instagram post: “Cool shell formation on my beach walk.”
Some have interpreted the post as a threat, alleging that 86 47 means to violently remove Mr Trump from office, including by assassination.
What does ’86 47′ mean?
The number 86 can be used as a verb in the US. It commonly means “to throw somebody out of a bar for being drunk or disorderly”.
One recent meaning of the term is “to kill”, according to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, which said it had not adopted this meaning of 86 “due to its relative recency and sparseness of use”.
The number has previously been used in a political context by Matt Gaetz, who was President Donald Trump’s pick for attorney general but withdrew from consideration following a series of sexual misconduct allegations.
Mr Gaetz wrote: “We’ve now 86’d…” and listed political opponents he had sparred with who ended up stepping down.
Meanwhile, 47 is supposedly representing Mr Trump, who is the 47th US president.
Mr Comey later removed the post, saying he thought the numbers “were a political message” and that he was not aware that the numeric arrangement could be associated with violence.
“I didn’t realise some folks associate those numbers with violence. It never occurred to me, but I oppose violence of any kind, so I took the post down,” Mr Comey said.
Mr Trump rejected the former FBI director’s explanation, telling Fox News: “He knew exactly what that meant. A child knows what that meant… that meant assassination.”
Donald Trump Jr accused Mr Comey of “casually calling for my dad to be murdered”.
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US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem confirmed in a post on X that Mr Comey had been interviewed as part of “an ongoing investigation” but gave no indication of whether he might face further action.
The Secret Service is part of the Department of Homeland Security.
White House deputy chief of staff Taylor Budowich said Mr Comey had put out “what can clearly be interpreted as a hit on the sitting president of the United States”.
“This is deeply concerning to all of us and is being taken seriously,” Mr Budowich wrote on X.
Another White House official James Blair said the post was a “Clarion Call (…) to terrorists & hostile regimes to kill the President of the United States as he travels in the Middle East”.
Mr Trump fired Mr Comey in May 2017 for botching an investigation into 2016 democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, the White House said at the time.
While Mr Comey was the director of the FBI, the agency opened an investigation into possible collusion between the Trump 2016 presidential campaign and Russia to help get Mr Trump elected.